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Rima Merriman,
The Electronic Intifada
While
Palestinians under occupation in the West Bank and
Gaza are scrambling to come up with a new national
Palestinian vision, Israeli Arabs are looking for
ways to wrest equal citizenship rights for
themselves as non-Jews in a state whose reason for
existence is to nurture Jewish identity and culture.
According to a recent New York Times news
item, "A group of prominent Israeli Arabs [in a
report issued in December 2006] has called on Israel
to stop defining itself as a Jewish State and become
a 'consensual democracy for both Arabs and Jews,'
prompting consternation and debate across the
country." The report is called "The
Future Vision of the Palestinian Arabs in Israel"
and the strategies in the report will be implemented
by The National Committee of the Local Arab
Authorities in Israel.
The term "Israeli Arabs", as used above by the
New York Times, is widespread inside and outside
Israel, both in the media and in scholarly articles.
The emphasis is on the second word -- "Arabs" rather
than on the qualifier "Israeli". The alternative
term "Palestinian Israelis" would come as a rude
shock to many Israelis, even secular nationalists,
conditioned as they are to think of the Palestinians
amongst them (20 percent of the population) as a
people who had no hand in the agrarian or industrial
building of the Zionist State. These people are
tolerated at best, so long as they submit themselves
to the Zionist ideal. Arab Israelis, for example,
must acknowledge "the existence of the state of
Israel as the state of the Jewish people" before
they can even participate in the political process
(1992 Basic Law).
In
one way, the subtext for this usage emphasizes the
Zionist narrative: Jews (the majority of whom come
from outside Israel) have a God given right to live
in historic Palestine, but the indigenous
Palestinian is a generic Arab with only a tenuous
sense of belonging to a specific geographic area.
The term "Israeli Arabs" includes Muslim and
Christian Arabs, the remnant of indigenous
Palestinians that had escaped the ethnic cleansing
of 1948, now numbering 1.3 million strong.
Significantly, it does not include Jewish Arabs, who
are referred to, instead, as "oriental Jews". Nor
does it include the dispossessed Bedouins (about
100,000), who are denied legal recognition and
herded in the arid northeastern part of the Negev
(the western and fertile part having been reserved
for Jewish settlers).
But the term also accurately reflects the sense of
schizophrenia as well as exclusion that Palestinians
with Israeli IDs feel. As people residing in a State
formed against their will, they are not Israelis,
but "Palestinian Arabs in Israel, the indigenous
peoples, the residents of the State of Israel, and
an integral part of the Palestinian People and the
Arab and Muslim and human Nation." In their own
words, they are simply "in Israel" and must now
resolve their identity and take responsibility for
themselves: "who are we and what do we want for our
society?"
The rising national consciousness among Palestinians
in Israel is both courageous and thorny. Such
consciousness aspires to counteract intangibles such
as "intellectual and emotional transfer" and
distancing from their Arab culture, as well as
tangibles such as land, planning, and housing
policies and economic strategies.
The predictable Israeli assault on this new
consciousness will be ferocious, especially from the
Jewish religious nationalist camp, but no less from
the Israeli legal apparatus, which has already
legitimatized the denial of equal citizenship rights
for non-Jewish citizens. Israeli "consternation"
will come from every corner, because Zionism,
whether in its secular or religious variant, is
basically about a nation of Jews (even though the
majority is made up of foreigners to Israel) and for
Jews. The various segments of Israeli society may
differ regarding ways of achieving "security" and
"peace", but there has been no significant practical
difference, as far as Palestinians in Israel are
concerned, between left and right Israeli
governments. The emphasis of both has been on the
Jewish nature of the State and so in compromising
the rights of Israeli Arabs.
Israeli Arabs have plenty of reasons to deny Israel
moral legitimacy and to fight for their rights: "we
have been suffering from extreme structural
discrimination policies, national oppression,
military rule that lasted till 1966, land
confiscation policy, unequal budget and resources
allocation, rights discrimination and threats of
transfer. The State has also abused and killed its
own Arab citizens, as in the Kufr Qassem massacre,
the land day in 1976 and Al-Aqsa Intifada back in
2000."
The new Israeli Arab strategies strike a reasonable
balance between preservation of Arab identity and
values (through institutional self rule in
education, culture and religion) and achieving full
citizenship and equality with the Jewish majority.
Israeli Arabs are proposing a "consensual democracy"
for Israel similar to the Belgian model. (Belgium is
made up of communities of Dutch, French and German
speakers, with each group being able to elect its
own parliament that governs such things as culture,
education and language).
Israeli consternation notwithstanding, the vision
that Israeli Arabs are putting forward is consonant
with the vision of the founder of Zionism, Theodor
Hertzl, as described by the Israeli writer A.B.
Yehoshua. Hertzl envisioned an Israel where "The
rabbis didn't get involved in politics, the Arabs
had full rights, the cities all had rapid transit,
the workers had social benefits undreamed of in
Europe, the choice of theater and opera rivaled ...
Vienna. Its people did not die violent deaths and
the whole world exalted in its contribution to
humankind." It is a vision, unfortunately, that is
good only for outside consumption, not for Israeli
governments that are driven by a mentality of greed,
fear, and paranoia untempered by guilt.
The journey of Israeli Arabs towards freedom will be
long and arduous, not least because the Israelis
have perfected the art of using bureaucratic
procedures to block the implementation of legal
advances when these do take place. But articulating
their vision is a major step forward and an
inspiration to Palestinians everywhere. Equality for
Palestinians in Israel will never happen unless they
themselves make it happen.
Rima Merriman is a Palestinian-American living in
Ramallah in the occupied West Bank. |